35 Years FREE - Shepherdstown Good News Paper
Transcription
35 Years FREE - Shepherdstown Good News Paper
SPRING 2014 35 Years FREE but not cheap Sapling on Screen Susan Carney 2 Issue 137 Vol. XXXVI, No. 1 Established May 1979 PUBLISHER Shepherdstown Ministerial Association EXECUTIVE EDITOR Randall W. Tremba EDITORS Mary Bell Cassie Bosley Kathryn Burns John Case Hannah Cohen Todd Cotgreave Sue Kennedy Mark Madison Wendy Mopsik Sarah Soltow Claire Stuart Ed Zahniser PRE-PRODUCTION EDITOR Libby Howard SENIOR DESIGNER Melinda Schmitt DIGITAL IMAGE EDITOR Nan Doss PHOTOGRAPHER Jessie Schmitt Jamie Lawrence TYPISTS Kathy Reid COPY EDITORS Rie Wilson Claire Stuart PROOFREADERS Betty Lou Bryant Carolina and Brent Ford Ed Zahniser DISTRIBUTION Lex Miller TREASURER Alex Shaw DESIGN & LAYOUT HBP, Inc. Circulation: 13,000 copies printed Bulk mail (11,200) Shepherdstown all patrons (3,450) Kearneysville PO, RR 1-4 (3,000) Shenandoah Jct (800) Harpers Ferry PO, RR 1,3 (2,250) Bakerton (80) Martinsburg RR 3 (620) Sharpsburg PO, RR 2 (1,060) Direct mail by request (1,000) Stacks: area restaurants, shops, and visitor centers (1,000) Address GOOD NEWS PAPER, P.O. Box 1212 Shepherdstown, WV 25443 Telephone (304) 876-6466 • FAX (304) 876-2033 Copyright 2014 Shepherdstown Ministerial Association, Inc. All rights revert to the author on publication. The opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of the Advisory Group or the publishers. ! Web aper.org e h t on ewsp N o w stowngoodn olor! c herd s in .shep ork w t www ar see Contents Now on the Web! www.shepherdstowngoodnewspaper.org see artworks in color! Like us on Facebook! Spring 2014 Essays, Art & Poetry 3 Building Community Bridges. By Randall Tremba 5 Roots and Wings. By Sarah Soltow 11–13 ARTWORKS Susan Carney. By Hannah Cohen 14 POETRY Sarah Kezman: “dear sister…” 15 EARTHBEAT John Muir. By Mark Madison 16–17 The Faeries in Grandma’s Garden. By Eleanor Hanold 19 Mercy Killers. By Marellen Johnson Aherne People, Places & Things 4 Mary Beth Kilmer. By Todd Cotgreave 6 The Local Source. By Sue Kennedy 7 Seasoned Florists Flourish on German Street. By Wendy Mopsik 8 What Kind of Name Is “Cool Green”? By Claire Stuart 9 Vernell Doyle. By Murray Deutchman 10 Ferry Hill. By Mary Bell 18 Simplicity Finds Its Season at Four Season Books. By John Case 20Archive Faith, Hope & Charity 21 Religious Communities 22 Donors plus Building Community Bridges 23 Business & Service Cover Artist Susan Carney is an artist living and working in Shepherdstown. She is inspired by everything around her, often drawn to metaphor and mystery. “The interior motivation for a work may not be obvious to a viewer and can therefore be open to their own interpretation.” Clarification In our Winter issue, Hannah Cohen’s piece on Ralph Scorza (page 11) opened with a paragraph in italics that some readers thought was a quotation from a source other than Cohen. It was, in fact, her own words. We apologize for the confusion. Subscription Form If you are not already receiving the GOOD NEWS PAPER we will be happy to send it to you free of charge. Fill in and mail this coupon. You can also request subscriptions on our website: shepherdstowngoodnewspaper.org. Name: _______________________________________________________________________ Address:_______________________________________________________________________ Town: _______________________________________________ZIP:_________________ GOOD NEWS PAPER P.O. Box 1212 • Shepherdstown, WV 25443 3 Building Community Bridges Randall Tremba Power without love is reckless and abusive, and love without power is sentimental and anemic. Power at its best is love implementing the demands of justice, and justice at its best is power correcting everything that stands against love. —Martin Luther King Jr. I am not colorblind. Black people were not welcomed in the church of my childhood. God wanted races segregated. It’s in the Bible—or so I was told. I am not colorblind. I was the only white boy in the starting lineup of Youngstown’s South High School basketball team and the only one to go college after we all graduated. I still count the white boys on every basketball team I watch. I can’t help myself. I am not colorblind. So I can’t help but notice that in this nation black boys in general don’t have the same opportunities that white boys in general have. A lot has to do with the birth lottery. But a lot also has to do with systemic injustice built into the infrastructure of our society. It’s mostly invisible to whites. We’ve come a long way, but we still have a lot of work to do, including listening to each other. And that’s where a “bridge” can help. It helps get us to people we don’t often see or hear much. Jefferson County is about to undertake a community “bridge building” project. The initial event will be at Jefferson High School, Sunday, March 30, at 4 p.m. The ROTC will present colors. The Jefferson High jazz band will play. Both high school choirs will perform. Combined voices from various county churches will sing, “The time has come for us to work together.” On stage that afternoon, speaking out for building bridges will be the county sheriff, the superintendent of schools, the president emeritus of the West Virginia State NAACP, and the minister of the Presbyterian Church in Shepherdstown. (Sorry, no bishops were available!) Last summer, following the acquittal of George Zimmerman (alleged shooter of Trayvon Martin), longtime local civil rights advocates met and agreed that another “placard-waving protest” in front of the Jefferson County courthouse wouldn’t do much good. Let’s do something positive, they said. Let’s find a way to involve whites and blacks in constructive conversations about race. Instead of talking among ourselves about race and racial issues, let’s build a bridge or two over the rift that separates us. I know, I know. We’ve been here before—several times before. And we will be here again and again, for this rift is deep and wide. Besides, bridges don’t last forever. And some don’t reach far enough. Building and repairing bridges is endless work. If our nation is to change, states must change. If states are to change, counties must change. If counties are to change, schools, churches, courts, and police departments must change. And if institutions are to change, hearts must change, one at a time. And that’s sometimes called repentance or, more accurately, returning—returning to the way of love and righteousness. We have all gone astray. We have lost our way. But this a moment of grace—a time to return from exile and rebuild the Beloved Community. Those attending the March 30 convocation, “Building Community Bridges,” will be invited to commit to one of three conversation circles. Small groups of mixed races and ethnicities will meet several times from April through June to practice the fine art of listening carefully to others. One circle is Courageous Conversations: direct conversations about race, perceptions, and feelings, including fears and hopes. Another circle is Advocacy: working for transformation through legislation, policies, and practices. Laws matter. As Martin Luther King Jr. put it in his 1966 speech “Sleeping Through the Revolution”: It may be true that you can’t legislate integration but you can legislate desegregation. It may be true that morality cannot be legislated, but behavior can be regulated. It may be true that the law cannot change the heart, but it can restrain the heartless. The law cannot make a man love me, but it can restrain him from lynching me, and I think that’s pretty important also. And so while the law may not change the hearts of men, it does change the habits of men. The third circle is a discussion of The New Jim Crow, by Michelle Alexander, and the issues raised by her book. Many racist practices were outlawed 50 years ago by historic civil rights legislation, including the Voting Rights Act. Yes, there’s been progress, but there’s been regression, too. Jim Crow practices, for example, have reemerged in certain parts of our massive criminal justice system, legally but unjustly shackling millions of young black men to lives of despair. Racism is the notion that one race is inferior to another and thus undeserving of equal treatment or equal opportunity. Racism lurks quietly and insidiously in many a heart, if not all hearts. It’s a darkness that only love can drive out! Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that. (Martin Luther King Jr.) Jesus was born into a racist society and weaned on racist ideas and practices. His people considered themselves superior to others, exceptional and extraordinary in every way. But, then, what people don’t? Yes, Jesus was born into a racist society. But he was also born with a certain light in his heart, a light from the great ancestors that he would cherish and cultivate. I will give you as a light to the nations, that my salvation [which is to say, my healing] may reach to the end of the earth. (Isaiah, 600 BCE) That light is in every heart. It’s a light that enlightens all people. It’s a light that shows us new possibilities, such as rebuilding a bridge that has crumbled or building one where there is none. GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 4 Mary Beth Kilmer A Shepherdstown Original Photo by Todd Cotgreave “It surprises me when I meet someone I don’t know.” Mary Beth Kilmer has lived all but seven of her years in Jefferson County, W.Va., and if she doesn’t know you directly, she knows your mom, your cousin, your neighbor, or at least used to have drinks with your orthodontist at Ferry Hill. She at one time ran the most popular spot in Shepherdstown, currently manages one of the busiest restaurants downtown, and has not once let her red hair keep her down. After high school, Mary Beth tried a brief stint at Shepherd College, where, she admits, her grades were not stellar. She did, however, receive an A+ for dancing and cavorting at the 1872 Club. With nothing keeping her feet planted in Shepherdstown, she lit off to Lake Waramaug in Connecticut. “Drove up in a VW Bug with two working gears, $20 in my pocket, and no job waiting for me.” Mary Beth traveled there with a friend who had free housing by working at a home for wayward boys. With nowhere to live, Mary Beth would sneak into her friend’s room at night. She was eventually caught and promptly offered a job. She worked days at the home and got a night job working at the Boulder Inn, where she worked her way up from server to manager, ran the bar, and scheduled all the bands. Traveling to Shepherdstown in the late ’80s for what was supposed to be a short visit, Mary Beth fell in love and never made it back to Connecticut. She got a job at the Martinsburg Holiday Inn bussing tables, worked her way up to manager, and was back to running the bar and booking bands. Things changed when she set up Ed’s Beer and Wine in Ranson with her then husband, Ed Barney. They sold home brewing supplies along with a great selection of craft and hard-to-find beer and wine. They also sponsored a race team from Summit Point called “Mo Beer Racing.” Many of the team’s amazing, fantastic, and death-defying victories were said to have come from the fine PHOTO BY TURTLE CLINGENPEEL Todd Cotgreave Staff at the Blue Moon Café: (left to right) Kim Bowen, Ben Proudman, Anna Malcolm, Jesse Boyd, Mary Beth Kilmer with her son Harper Furioso, and Mable Jo Cotgreave suds offered to them by Ed’s Beer and Wine. As Ed’s Beer and Wine sales grew, they noticed many of their customers were driving from Shepherdstown. They moved the shop to Maddex Square, where it stayed for a little more than a year. Sales increased enough that they decided to move their enterprise to downtown Shepherdstown, and that’s when the magic happened. The sign out front read, “Ed’s Taproom, Redheads Welcome.” Many businesses have come and gone on German Street with little notice; Ed and Mary Beth’s was not one of them. The setup was simple enough: a deli in the front with locally sourced ingredients, beer coolers stocked with all the craft beer you could shake a stick at (Budweiser was not among the choices), and a bar in the back. Those simple ingredients led to a phenomenon that is hard to put into words. Mary Beth led the charge, as she does everywhere she works, with a family-first attitude, meaning that if you work with her, you are family. You will be in the trenches together serving a busy lunch crowd, you will be stocking beer at midnight for a bar that has exceeded the fire marshal’s maximum occupancy by 60 percent, and at the end of your shift you will be treated with a warm smile, a beer, and the knowledge that Mary Beth loves GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 Stellar Watson at Ed’s Taproom you. The sense of community the staff felt was incredible, and when you paired that with great beer on tap and kick-ass music, you got something very special. When asked what it was like to run the coolest place in Shepherdstown, Mary Beth answered the question before it was finished being asked: “It was phenomenal, the greatest experience ever.” Just speaking about it, Mary Beth’s eyes lit up and she was grinning from ear to ear. “Worst layout ever.… It was too small and too loud, but we would fill the building from stem to stern six nights a week.” For those of us who were there, we remember it just like that. Stellar Watson’s amps were set at “ear bleeding.” You had to fight and wriggle past all the people to see Davey Jones face-to-face, singing, screaming, and jumping up and down, with Mary Beth right there, sitting on the amp with a huge smile on her face. Some nights were slower of course. You would often see the usual suspects lined up at the bar having a few pints of craft brew, engaging in witty repartee, well…repartee at least. Those nights you could practically reach out and touch the sense of community. But with her marriage dissolving and a seemingly constant barrage of late nights, it became harder and harder to keep the freewheeling business financially viable, and the taproom had to close its doors. “We were having too much fun.” It didn’t take long for Mary Beth to find employment at the Blue Moon Café on Princess Street, where she has become manager and is booking great musical acts. The Blue Moon staff now shares the same sense of family that was at Ed’s. “People leave the Blue Moon if they are going to graduate school or if they are getting married or having a baby. The way I see it, they are going to have to drag me outta here.” Those who have been around long enough know her, and she knows them. Kim Reid grew up in the area and recalls Mary Beth in her youth as “an unmistakable streak of fiery red hair running through downtown Charles Town.” Life has come full circle, with Mary Beth’s youngest son Harper now running around town with a head full of red hair, making friends, and flashing the occasional smile or two. If you don’t know her, maybe you should. She’s Mary Beth from Shepherdstown. Todd Cotgreave is the chief operating officer of WSHC 89.7 Shepherd University Radio, wine sales manager at Reid’s Distributor, and had more beers than he can remember at Ed’s Taproom. 5 Roots and Wings Love Letter to Shepherdstown Sarah Soltow Dear Shepherdstown, As I write this, snow is falling ever so lightly once again in this place I’ve called home for much of my formative life. This winter is cold and hard, not as difficult as many I’ve experienced, but somehow it feels simply cold and hard. I can feel Arizona calling my name more strongly each and every day. It won’t be long now until I head that way. My husband, Fred, is already there. You know him as Pastor Fred of Shepherdstown Lutheran Parish and have come to love him and his tremendous capacities for generosity, leadership, and willingness to do the toughest jobs. Certainly the community benefitted from his ministry here, and you can be assured that he will find more adventures in ministry out there in Phoenix and Quartzsite, Ariz. As I continue to attend St. James’s and St. Peter’s Churches, I sense the congregations grieving the loss of his presence, but I also know that people have a way of keeping on through even the most difficult of changes. As I write this letter, he is unloading the Pod that contains our worldly possessions. Once upon a time, when I was very young and living in an upstairs apartment at Belle Vue, the ancestral Shepherd home, I was very proud of myself for having so few pieces of the world to carry around. Now I marvel how it is possible that we can live without all the baskets, bowls, pitchers, and other artifacts of established life that we’ve carried for so many years. My packing process has been one of sifting and sorting, finding homes for items that I’ve loved among the people that I love. And recently I have been gratified to visit a friend’s home and simply see all of these things, that have been so much a part of my own life, settling into someone else’s life…gently, easily, lovingly. I really could not part with the macaroni art, however. While I was floored at the discovery of it buried within the depths of the garage in a nondescript plastic tub, it brought back such memories of my young children. I remember them on a happy day, making the “I heart you, Mom” statement with all the creative flourishes of discarded lace and ribbon, fabric and macaroni. One from each of my children, they are a little too large to frame, but invaluable nonetheless, and I will carry them forward with me into this new life. Someone asked me, dear Shepherdstown, if I thought I would blog this adventure. No, I replied, but I think I will write cards and letters. This being National School Counselors’ Week, I received a hundred or so cards from the students at Driswood Elementary School. These cards tell me I’m great; they tell me they appreciate me; they display drawings of hearts and flowers and sometimes the scrawlings of unformed but growing minds. One little girl wrote, “Thanks for hearing me.” This touched me greatly and is a very small gift that I can also carry forward with me. Dear Shepherdstown, I want to thank you for the roots that you have nurtured, growing deeply within the earth of this particular place. The 300-year-old oak that stands behind our home has been one of the greatest teachers of that lesson for me. Not that I was rootless, but it has taken me a while to actually feel my roots extending deeply into the earth. Once these roots are recognized, then one can use them and depend upon them, knowing that even in movement, they remain steadfast. For me the rootedness involves the connections to people and places in this town that have grown over the course of 40 years, along with a relatively new sense of family history when I learned that my grandmother’s grandmother was Sarah Morgan of Shepherdstown, who had moved over to Berkeley County to marry a schoolteacher named Charles McKown. When Fred and I moved here in 2001, I had been absent from you, dear Shepherdstown, for 19 years—another flight from this place, with wings less formed and two children in tow. Returning to you was a welcome reprieve, but I was not aware at the time of the kinds of healing that must occur when one returns to resurrect a past life, so to speak. I struggled for a while; no job felt quite right, and old friends had worn paths that my footsteps could not follow. The task of discerning new paths in old places took some time, but I learned how to follow my own footsteps through the woods and down to the river. I learned how to swim in the Sarah and Fred Soltow with grandson watery depths of sometimes difficult Elliott Cottrell emotions. I learned how to play music, and I learned how to stand up while people were looking. I found the spaces where I could move and be myself, while also holding the more traditional spaces of educator and pastor’s wife. And, dear Shepherdstown, I do not think I could have done this without you. You helped me plumb the depths of my roots while nurturing the growth and expansion of my wings. You taught me to fly, and in so doing, how to nurture and support others in their own journeys. Dear Shepherdstown, if I were a really good musician, I would sing a lyrical song of your place in my world. As it is, I will dearly miss my Parish Pipers, and I will pass the torch of Vacation Bible School music to another. I will go to the Meck a few more times and open myself completely to the incredible magic of the true musicians in this community. I will dance with my friends, and I will be ever grateful for all the music and dancing that has ever happened, and ever will happen in this community. Dear Shepherdstown, if I were a really good artist, I would throw your colors against the canvas of truth where you shine as a crown jewel in the love of all things beautiful. As it is, I will carry some art with me, some fragile pieces, some sturdy ones, and I will build a new home in Arizona adorned with pieces of beloved Shepherdstown just as some pieces of me remain to adorn others’ homes here. Dear Shepherdstown, I have the sense now that I am very carefully and mindfully folding up the tent of my life in this place. The soil is loosening around my feet; I feel the urge to stretch my wings and fly. None of this would be possible without you and those who continue their lives here. I will always call you my home, because you are the seat of my soul. As it is, I have only these words to try to convey what you mean to me. And so, dear Shepherdstown, until our paths cross again, you remain in my heart as I hope I remain in yours. PHOTO SUBMITTED BY SOLTOWS February 8, 2014 Sarah Felker Soltow GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 6 The Local Source Sue Kennedy met Dan Saum and one year later they married and moved to Rockville. While Dan worked at Quest Diagnostics, Lillian was at the Norm Thompson Fulfillment Center. Within a couple of years the family began to grow. George Daniel Saum IV came along and then Robert Forrest Saum—Danny the Fourth and Bobby the First. “We moved to this area in January 1995. We needed a single family home with enough land for two boys and two dogs. We found a wonderful home we could afford in Shenandoah Junction, and we still live there.” While the boys were in school, Potter-Saum “played in the dirt” as a gardener for hire, for Meadows Farms Nursery, Ridgefield Farms, and Potomac Farms. Life was good. Then in 2002, the bottom dropped out of the Saums’ world. Bobby, then 9, was diagnosed with a brain tumor. The doctors at Johns Hopkins successfully removed the tumor and the prognosis was very hopeful. On April 1, 2002, Bobby and his mom were driving to Baltimore for his first round of chemo when they were involved in a horrific accident near Frederick and Bobby was killed. Potter-Saum was very badly hurt, both physically and emotionally, and talking about her handsome little guy with an adventurous spirit and great sense of humor still brings tears. “After Bobby died,” she said, “gardening was my lifeline.” Joining and volunteering with the Wild Flower Garden Club of Jefferson and Berkeley County, and Master Gardeners eventually helped life get on track. Potter-Saum went back to work at Meadows Farms. Then 2009 came along and, as she said, “I blew out my knee.” Quest downsized her husband out of his 17-year manager position. Potter-Saum was laughing at this point in the story. “We were both out of jobs, so guess what we decided to do? We took $5,000 out of savings and went to Europe for three weeks.” Now I was laughing. By the end of the year the future was coming into focus. Potter-Saum worked for Laurel Parker and Karen Valentine, owners of The Source when it was on Princess St. She also worked at Retropolitan and did freelance social media marketing for small businesses. Parker left The Source, and Potter-Saum partnered with Valentine until Valentine left in 2011. Potter-Saum was now the GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 Proprietor Lillian Potter-Saum sole proprietor and within months relocated to German Street and her store became The Local Source. “It was a huge risk, but when this space opened up I knew it was perfect and I had to have it. John Shank and Joe Matthews own this building and they have been fabulous to me since before day one. I told them I couldn’t afford the rent but knew my concept of a gift shop promoting local artists would work and made them a deal. If they would let me pay half of what they were asking for six months, just time enough to get me going, I would pay them back in full. They agreed and took a chance on me. I couldn’t have done this without Joe and John. I can’t say enough nice things about them.” The Local Source is eclectic, to say the least: Mike Austin’s honey, 78 RPMs, knitted hats of all sizes, local pottery and soup-can lanterns, organic cleaning supplies and foods, silk scarves and hot sauce. Most of the art and gifts are local and many are on consignment. “It’s my locals that keep me going: beauty supplies, honey, tea, and little birthday gifts.” The shop is full of gifts and impulse buys that brighten your day. As a community goodwill effort, this devout recycler puts a box outside the shop for your used batteries, cell phones, wine corks, egg cartons, printer cartridges. You know, the stuff you really don’t know how to recycle. Lillian and Dan are mainstays in the town social scene and very supportive of events, volunteer organizations, and the other shops. She’s an active member of the Shepherdstown Business Association PHOTOS BY JESSIE SCHMITT H ave you ever fantasized about owning your own business? Sure you have, everyone has. You love to bake, or dance, or paint, and you want to pay it forward. You’re an antique freak, a fitness nut, a serial collector, you schedule vacations around your garden, you see that kind of need, you know you can fill it. It’s successfully done all the time—in the movies. Take Diane Keaton in Baby Boom. Her “Country Baby” took the baby food industry by storm with nothing more than a rotting apple orchard, a dry well, no staff, and a money pit for a house—while she was raising a baby alone. All she had was an idea, an applesauce recipe, and an MBA. I rest my case. Does any of this strike a familiar spark in your would-be future plans? Well then, why not do it? Do this community a service and share your interests with all those waiting customers. What could be better than making a living dealing in a world that you love? Having your own thriving small business is the stuff dreams are made of. Success is so easy in a dream. Unfortunately though, owning a small business is anything but easy. No matter how talented you are, no matter how full of ideas, it takes a positive attitude, tireless energy, risk taking, and passion. Even so, there are no guarantees. Attitude, passion, and energy are under the owner’s control, but the economy isn’t, nor is the weather. And we won’t even get into the tax laws. Taking those unknowns into consideration, you must add another character trait to the ownership profile: bravery. One has to be brave to qualify; very brave. Lillian Potter-Saum is the owner and sole proprietor of The Local Source in Shepherdstown, and she has all the above characteristics. All of them. She’s is a self-described environmentalist. “It’s a love concept,” she said. “When you take care of the Earth you’re taking care of your own backyard.” Lillian Potter was born in Riverdale, Md., the sixth of seven Potter children. She attended Northwestern School in Adelphi and then went off to Prince George’s Community College for a liberal arts degree. Working all the time, she said, “It took me four years to get my associate’s degree.” In 1986, Potter The Local Source storefront on German Street and said, “I like to think about the new businesses coming into town, not the ones that have left. Things change, that’s the way life is. Shopping locally is something we try to do. I did my Christmas shopping in eight local establishments and my family and friends loved their gifts.” Potter-Saum summed up her passion for her work by quoting a friend: When buying from an artist/maker, you’re buying more than just an object/ painting. You are buying hundreds of hours of failures and experimentation. You are buying days, weeks and months of frustration and moments of PURE JOY. YOU AREN’T JUST BUYING A THING, you’re buying a piece of heart, part of a soul, a moment of someone’s life. Most importantly, you’re buying the artists more time to do something they are passionate about. “A very dear friend shared this with me. I feel like she peeked into my heart and ‘read my mail.’ This is so true.” Sue Kennedy’s dream is to open a cable knit sweater shop with a soda fountain. 7 Seasoned Florists Flourish on German Street Wendy Mopsik PHOTOS BY STAN MOPSIK C an you imagine a more rewarding career than one that brings happiness to celebrants, comfort to mourners, and beauty to everything in the surrounding environment? The work of a florist is just such a career, and the two owners of The Village Florist are the creators of this magic. Douglass Hutzell and Tim Valerio have worked side-by-side in their own florist business for the last 19 years, although their journey began long before. Valerio remembers being intrigued at age five by the morning glories growing in his uncle’s window boxes and vividly described the sheep grazing on the grasses owned by the Johns Hopkins Hospital property not far from his home. Living in East Baltimore where personal gardens were confined to small spaces and soil was a luxury, he crept down to the nearby railroad tracks to steal dirt for his first vegetable garden. “I actually grew carrots, turnips, potatoes, and onions in tin cans lined up on the window sill,” he recalled. Choosing which future course to follow wasn’t a hard decision for Hutzell either. Growing up in the Hagerstown area, he graduated from the Career Study Center, a vocational high school option in the Washington County Public Schools. With a concentration in horticulture and a strong background in all aspects of the business, he immediately was able to pursue his lifelong interest at Gibney’s Florist in Hagerstown. Huzell’s and Valerio’s paths crossed sometime later when, in the late 1980s, Valerio also found employment at Gibney’s. His first job after graduation from Patterson High School had been with a florist in Canton, a neighborhood in Baltimore that is currently affluent and trendy but was a much different place at that time. Valerio says he always knew the city was not where he wanted to be and moved to rural western Maryland as soon as he was able. The men began their own business in 1995, creating The Village Florist in Hagerstown. As luck and timing would have it, in August 2009 Nancy Van Tol-Rempe, of the well-known Van Tol florist family, spied their parked Village The Village Florist surprises you with offerings beyond fresh and silk flowers. Florist van and tracked them down with an attractive offer. With no family to continue the business, she was ready to give up the shops in Shepherdstown and Charles Town stores. She hoped that Hutzell and Valerio would take over as new owners, incorporating her Village Florist business with theirs of the same name. As the number of shops increased, the men realized that they were stretched a bit thin and gradually consolidated to a single florist shop on German Street in Shepherdstown, choosing the location with a university, strong business association, variety of churches, a well-trafficked main street, friendly townspeople, and a less saturated market. Both men voiced their pleasure at being part of town. “We appreciate being included in the library’s summer reading program and awarded a flower to each participant who completed a reading log,” declared Hutzell. “We are also pleased to donate a fresh arrangement weekly to the Shepherdstown Visitors Center, adding to the already welcoming quality of the space.” The business owners stressed the difference between “order gatherers” that are listed as ubiquitous phone numbers in the yellow pages and the actual local florist. “We can charge more responsibly, answer directly and deliver the orders in a timely manner, while often knowing the customer who is receiving the flowers or custommade basket,” explained Hutzell. Most of their orders come from the surrounding area, and they credit the Shepherd University community with generating multiple opportunities for flowers. Steve Gossard, their driver and long-time employee, manages deliveries to Hagerstown, Smithsburg, and Sharpsburg as well as locations closer to town. This Valentine’s Day display window reminds customers of their loved ones and signals the busiest single business day of the year. Owners Doug Hutzell and Tim Valerio work together to finish an order of vibrantly colored fresh flowers. There is a distinct division of labor between Hutzell and Valerio, although they both love working with flowers and designing the window displays. Hutzell finds the business and accounting side more satisfying and has intensified efforts to add more inventory to attract customers. “This is so much more than just a florist shop. We have chocolates, Trego jewelry, greeting cards for all occasions, seasonal silk flowers, items for decorating the home, some local art and photography, and specialty books to help with party and event planning.” Village Florist customers might also see for sale a watercolor painting done by Hutzell. He is self taught and very modest about his talent, which clearly demonstrates another facet of his artistic ability. If one should inquire, he may even show off a giclée, created by a process that digitizes his artwork and transfers it to canvas. Several of Hutzell’s paintings in different media are displayed, and he anticipates continuing this interest as time allows. Valerio’s passion for flowers is obvious, from his delight in naming and describing the species to his allencompassing enthusiasm for planting and nurturing his home gardens. Moving from a well-developed property in Chewsville, Md., that boasted formal gardens to an unlandscaped space in Sharpsburg posed unique and exciting challenges. Valerio loved the idea of being able to start from the beginning and eventually created another showplace with much variety and over 70 boxwoods. “I love knowing that the promise of a new bud or blossom is always there. Something can happen overnight that slightly changes the feel of the whole garden. In growing season, I’m outside from 6 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. and then back after work until dark.” Both florists agree that capitalizing on a natural talent for floral arrangement is the easiest way to begin. However, Valerio has taught classes and conducted seminars for regional garden clubs and local groups as well. The Chewsville gardens and the newer Sharpsburg garden next door to St. Paul’s Episcopal Church were featured in separate issues of HM@ Home, a supplement to Hagerstown Magazine, along with tips for gardening success. Hutzell added that the business always chooses seasonal flowers when possible, and they liberally help themselves to those grown by Valerio. During inhospitable weather, the men receive regular shipments from local wholesalers to fill customer orders. An indication of Valerio’s preference for fresh blossoms and plants came through loud and clear as he reiterated his need for gardens. “When I die, I promise to haunt anyone who leaves silk flowers on my grave.” Small towns need all kinds of retail businesses to meet the demands of their residents and to draw visitors from outside the area. But a shop that brings beauty, solace, joy, and cheer to customers is a necessity. Happily, German Street has a long history of housing The Village Florist and all of its bountiful treasures. Wendy Sykes Mopsik (wendymopsik@ frontiernet.net) has always wanted to work in a flower shop where there is no winter and where the fragrance of flowers is ever present. Yes, even on crazy, busy, exhausting Valentine’s Day! GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 8 What Kind of Name Is “Cool Green”? Claire Stuart PHOTOS BY JAMIE LAWRENCE M ichael Bean was an automotive technician at Union Sales Dodge when the business began suffering from the pains of Chrysler’s financial problems. Eventually the dealership closed its doors, and Bean was at a crossroads in his life. He decided to use his years of expertise and the tools he owned to go into business for himself. He opened a mobile auto air conditioning service, taking his business to people at home and at work. To find a name for his business, he made a list of all the words that described what he did. He shuffled them around to see how they looked and decided on the name Cool Green Auto Air. “Cool,” of course, was for air conditioning and “Green” because he wanted to emphasize the fact that he used environmentally sound practices in working with refrigerants. When Bean found his Shepherdstown location in 2010, the business morphed into Cool Green Auto and Tire. Bean’s expertise and 20 years experience went far beyond auto air-conditioning systems, and he was able to bring a hometown, full-service auto care facility to the community. The Institute of Automotive Service Excellence (ASE), a national nonprofit organization, has been testing and certifying technicians for over 40 years. Bean explained that new car dealers require technicians to earn certification before they send them for factory training. The ASE requirements state that to become certified in most specialty areas, you must pass one or more of the ASE certification exams and present proof of at least two years of relevant work experience. Bean is an ASE Certified Master Technician. In order to become a Master, you have to qualify in at least eight specialties. “You can renew certification every five years, but it is voluntary,” Bean says, and “it reflects the character of the person.” Cool Green is classified as a fullservice general auto repair facility. Bean says they service about 2,600 cars a year. About 1,000 are for state inspection and the rest are everything from oil changes to engine replacement. There are three service bays, and the Cool Green staff consists of four mechanics (including Bean) and two salespeople. Owner Michael Bean Seth the mechanic Cool Green Auto & Tire, on the Shepherdstown Pike Bean found an additional opportunity for his business in the big demand for used cars, and they’ve sold about 200 cars in the $3,000 to $5,000 price range. He attests that all of the cars they sell are thoroughly gone over in the shop before being offered for sale and are sold with a 30-day/1,000 mile 50-50 warranty (owner and shop split the cost) for parts and labor. Bean says that only one of all the cars he’s sold has had a serious engine issue, and he made it good. When he began his business, he says, “I knew how to fix cars. Now I know how to run a business. And some things you learn after you start a business!” Bean finds his work both challenging and exciting. “Technology is changing under our feet,” he says, “and vehicles are getting more and more high-tech.” “Old school mechanics knew engines and transmissions, and the new guys hardly work on them. They have more electrical know-how.” He describes himself as the generation in between. For an example of today’s sophisticated systems, he explained that ultrasound technology is behind the GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 operation of the crash response system in some cars. “They detect changes in the cabin pressure to get the air bags to deploy.” One thing he learned was that the equipment it takes to work on today’s vehicles is very expensive. “It’s hard to get an adequate return over the cost of tools while keeping costs down to satisfy loyal customers,” he said. He noted that with increasing auto computerization, diagnostic computers are a necessity, with a price tag in the neighborhood of $25,000. “And our main scanner doesn’t do everything from every car manufacturer.” He cited the tire pressure–monitoring feature on modern cars. If a tire has to be removed for repair, he explained that the car’s monitor will not recognize the tire when it is put back on. It has to be re-synchronized with the system. “And it takes a $2,000 tool just to do that!” With cars getting smarter and smarter—parking themselves, avoiding accidents, and even driving themselves— Bean observes that, control is being taken away from the driver and put into the hands of computer systems. Recalling Toyota’s recent problems with sticking throttles, he explained that control of the throttle is electronic and no longer controlled by cable. Formerly, gas pedals were connected to the engine by cables and linkages. Now there is no physical cable, and when you step on the gas, a sensor transmits data about the position of the pedal to a computer that uses the information to change the throttle position. When things go wrong with sensors, it is possible for cars to accelerate when you are not stepping on the gas or to slow down no matter how hard you give them the gas. Fortunately, this is very rare. Bean says that new cars are full of redundant systems, much like airplanes, so there is less chance of a system breaking down. “Any time anything can make a car safer, it is good,” he said, “but it drives up the cost of owning and repairing.” He pondered, “In the future, how will people afford to fix their cars?” For those who might wonder, Bean’s personal choice of a vehicle is a 2004 Chevy truck, although he notes that Toyotas are in great demand as used cars. He describes his vehicle choice to be “hardcore American” and adds, “My dad was a lifetime United Auto Workers member.” Cool Green services Shepherdstown’s police cars. “We fix them immediately and get them back in service,” says Bean. He welcomes anyone with a small fleet of business vehicles to talk to him about fleet maintenance. It is important to Bean to maintain the trust of the community by giving the best service and value that he can. He backs all major repair work with a three-year, 36,000-mile warranty. And in keeping with its name, Cool Green recycles anything possible and properly disposes of their cardboard, plastic, oils, and antifreeze. Cool Green is located at 8668 Shepherdstown Pike (304) 579-8920 Open 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday 9 Vernell Doyle A Person for Whom History “Became Real” Murray Deutchman PHOTOS BY MURRAY DEUTCHMAN V ernell Doyle is the person to see if you have questions about the history of Sharpsburg and the surrounding area. If she doesn’t know the answer, she will try to find it or let you know where you can find it. For the past seven years, she and her husband, Tim, have worked to learn the history of the Sharpsburg area and Sharpsburg in particular. They moved to the Hagerstown area in 1975, living first in the Leitersburg area and now live east of Hagerstown. She is a certified teacher in English and math and has taught in the public school system, at Hagerstown Community College, and in correctional education for the State of Maryland. She earned her master’s in English literature from Northern Illinois University and was working toward her doctorate before moving to Maryland. In addition to belonging to the Sharpsburg Historical Society, she is a Master Gardener in Washington County, a member of the Faces of the Civil War book group, an active musician, and a volunteer at the Newcomer House information and visitor center for the Heart of the Civil War Heritage Area. In 2006, she and Tim, hoping to enter the hospitality and tourism business, looked at Sharpsburg as an ideal location. They bought a house on West Chapline Street close to the main square in Sharpsburg. The house, built in 1856, was the former home of the Bender family, who have a long history in the Sharpsburg area. The Benders were a canal boat family; many of the men were canal boat captains on the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. The name is familiar to local residents because of Captain Bender’s Tavern on Main Street, a favorite eating spot. Raleigh Bender, captain of Canal Boat No. 1, established the business in 1936. Doyle says that she had little interest in history until they bought the house and decided to operate it as a vacation rental home. In addition to sparking an interest in local history, establishing and running the Antietam Guest House has served several purposes: It adds to the preservation of historic homes in Sharpsburg, shares Vernell Doyle at the Antietam Guest House The house that made history real the house and history with the public, and provides a retirement business for Vernell and Tim. When asked if the house is a B&B, they often joke that it is a BYOB: “Bring your own breakfast.” Mainly because of the research she and her husband did before and after purchasing the house, Doyle developed an interest in history. As she puts it, “History became real.” One of the first things the Doyles did after buying the house was to join the Sharpsburg Historical Society (SHS). Since then, Vernell has devoted much time and energy to discovering the history of Sharpsburg and the people who lived there and in the surrounding area. In 2009, some of that research resulted in the book Sharpsburg, in the Images of America series published by Arcadia Press. Doyle is now president of the SHS, which was formed in 2002. In 2008, the historical society led the process to have the town placed on the National Register of Historic Places, designated as a historic district. That designation makes possible tax breaks to those who help in preserving Sharpsburg’s heritage. Sharpsburg was once a busy commercial town, including several hotels and general markets. Historic Sharpsburg retains the same boundaries and eight streets that Joseph Chapline designed in 1763, but the commercial aspect of town has been reduced while the town remains a residential community, rooted in its churches, elementary school, and Nutter’s Ice Cream Parlor. In 2012, the SHS obtained a grant from the Heart of the Civil War Heritage Area that led to renovation and signage for the Big Spring. The spring was the primary source of water for Sharpsburg and the reason for its location. SHS designed and purchased a wayside sign that tells the history of the springhead and of its importance to the growth of the town. The town council arranged the sign’s installation for the 250th commemoration of the founding of Sharpsburg. Many descendants of Joseph Chapline attended the July 9, 2013, event. While at the National Archives in College Park, Md., researching the history of the spring’s stone wall, Vernell and Tim located the 1934 work orders for the improvements to the springhead. The Civil Works Administration, a precursor of the Work Projects Administration, funded the spring’s improvement as well as other Sharpsburg projects during the Great Depression. Last year Doyle was successful in obtaining a grant from the Washington County Gaming Commission for the purchase of a computer, printer, and projector for the historical society. These purchases will facilitate programs and help with the inventory and organization of the historical society’s records, books, photographs, and artifacts. The SHS headquarters are in Town Hall, in space donated by the town of Sharpsburg. In addition to historical society projects, Doyle has an active interest is tracking the names and history of the many families who have lived in Sharpsburg. She has recently been reading through the Washington House hotel guest register that indicates who stayed in the hotel in Hagerstown in the years just before the outbreak of the Civil War. The most renowned guest was John Brown, who signed the register as Isaac Smith, just before his attack on Harpers Ferry. A number of Sharpsburg residents stayed there during that period, most likely because they had business in town and the trip from Sharpsburg took several hours in the 1860s. A town resident recently gave SHS records of the Sharpsburg bank. These records provide another source of family names and businesses associated with Sharpsburg in the early 20th century. The SHS board members will be studying these records this winter and spring. You’d think that Doyle has her plate full just keeping up with her history projects, but not so! In addition to the many activities associated with her history life, Doyle also plays alto saxophone in the Rohrersville Band, attending practices once a week. When she moved to the Hagerstown area in 1975, she joined the Hagerstown Municipal Band and played with it for 10 years. After a hiatus from her music, she joined the Rohrersville Band in 2004. Anyone who has heard the band will know that its music is a handclapping, foot-tapping, and in many cases, a tear-producing experience (especially with its patriotic and historical medley). A life in service to education has morphed into a life of discovery about the history of southern Washington County. Doyle’s enthusiastic efforts have brought knowledge and interest to residents of that area. We cannot understand or appreciate the present without knowing what came before—and keeping that in mind as we live our lives today. It becomes real to us, as it became real to Doyle, when we realize that we are walking the same streets, living in the same neighborhoods and homes that were so much a part of the past. Murray Deutchman, a writer and retired attorney, lives in Sharpsburg. GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 10 Ferry Hill Across the River and Into the Past Mary Bell PHOTO BY JAMIE LAWRENCE J ust across the Rumsey Bridge from Shepherdstown stands Ferry Hill. From its prominent position overlooking the Potomac, this early 19thcentury plantation home has witnessed 200 years of history in and around Shepherdstown. If walls could talk! Colonel John Blackford built Ferry Hill, but no record exists of exactly when. Surviving records show that he purchased the land in 1816, and his family life was bustling in the house by 1825. By that time, Blackford’s first wife, Sarah, and two of her children had died, and Blackford was married to his second wife, Elizabeth Knode. Blackford’s descendants believed Colonel Blackford sited Ferry Hill on the bluff overlooking the Potomac and land beyond it so that he could see Sarah’s and their children’s gravesites on the Shepherd estate. Blackford became known as Colonel Blackford after earning this rank in the War of 1812. Colonel Blackford commanded a group of volunteer militia at the disastrous Battle of Bladensburg, where the American troops were routed in August of 1814. In a paper written in 1965, Helen Norton Beckenbaugh, one of Colonel Blackford’s descendants, states that John Blackford was never blamed for the fiasco at Bladensburg and was, in fact, granted his rank as colonel some time after the battle. John Blackford wanted Ferry Hill to be a brick house, and there were no brick works in the area at that time. He ordered the bricks from Scotland, and they were shipped as ballast into Baltimore Harbor. From there, the bricks were transported by oxcart to Ferry Hill. The brickwork on the front of the house is Flemish bond, which alternates the small end of the bricks (headers) with the sides of the bricks (stretchers). This decorative style of bricklaying was popular in domestic architecture at the time. The brickwork used on the back of the house is traditional running bond, featuring rows of offset stretchers. Also, it’s said that there is a neck of a whiskey bottle set into the bricks on the front of the house near the top of the second window from the right. Rear view of Ferry Hill Fortunately, John Blackford, who was a farmer, planter, businessman, and active citizen, kept a diary, and from that, one can derive a picture of life at Ferry Hill Plantation. By 1838, Ferry Hill comprised over 700 acres. Crops included hay, fruit, potatoes, livestock, and timber, for sale as well as home consumption. Colonel Blackford raised hogs, sheep, and beef for use on the plantation, and in 1838, he purchased a sausage-making machine that was so popular that he lent it to his neighbors. Under the slave labor–based economy in which Colonel Blackford operated (there were at least 25 slaves at Ferry Hill in 1838), Ferry Hill prospered. Blackford hired additional local labor from Shepherdstown, Sharpsburg, Boonsboro, and surrounds as needed. Colonel Blackford’s efforts were not confined to the operation of Ferry Hill. He also owned and operated the ferry service across the Potomac at Shepherdstown. His civic duties included serving as a sheriff for several years and as supervisor of the roads in the area. In April 1799, he served on a committee in Shepherdstown to investigate complaints about odors emanating from a tannery. Life at Ferry Hill was very social. Because of the difficulties of travel at the time, the Blackfords entertained overnight guests frequently and dinner guests almost daily. Colonel Blackford’s diary recounts that at least two and as many as a dozen visitors joined the family for dinner, stopping on their way to and from Baltimore, Washington, Hagerstown, and Harrisburg. As a matter of course, visitors who came from 15 miles or more spent the night and sometimes stayed for weeks. Mrs. Elizabeth Blackford died in 1838 after a long illness. Colonel John GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 Blackford died in 1839, and Ferry Hill was divided among his three sons. In 1848, Robert Douglas, who was married to Colonel Blackford’s daughter Helena, bought the property. Not much is known about life at Ferry Hill during this period, but it is known that Henry Kyd Douglas, Robert Douglas’ son from an earlier marriage and Helena’s stepson, grew up there. Then, the Civil War broke out. Ferry Hill played an important role throughout the war years. Henry Kyd Douglas, who was a young attorney at the time, enlisted in the Confederate army and became a staff officer for Stonewall Jackson. After the Battle of Antietam, Confederate wounded were sheltered at Ferry Hill, and when Union forces forced the Confederates back across the Potomac, Union troops occupied the house and land. Again in 1863 and in 1864, the Douglas family housed and entertained Confederate troops. At some time during the Civil War, Helena Douglas, Henry’s mother, was spotted by Union forces signaling to Confederate troops from a window at Ferry Hill. The Union forces, who were in control at the time, arrested Robert Douglas, her husband and Henry’s father, and held him at Fort McHenry for several months. Ferry Hill, like much of the region, was devastated by the Civil War. In his diary entitled I Rode With Stonewall, Henry Kyd Douglas described the view of Ferry Hill after the Battle of Antietam: “A beautiful farm was laid waste, its fences disappeared…artillery parks filled the wheat fields…rifle pits and several rifled cannon with their angry muzzles pointing across the Potomac, decorated the lawn.” After Henry Kyd Douglas’s death, Ferry Hill passed to his sister, who had married into the Beckenbaugh family. They operated it, first as a farm and later as a restaurant, until 1951. They sold Ferry Hill to Frederick W. Morrison Sr., who continued the restaurant—a popular spot for Shepherd College students. The National Park Service bought Ferry Hill in 1974, giving Morrison a right to retention, which he exercised until 1979. When he left the property, NPS renovated Ferry Hill and moved its headquarters there in April 1980. NPS headquarters have since been moved to a new building, and Ferry Hill stands on its own as an NPS site open to the public. In May 2012, NPS Superintendent Kevin Branch and other local and state officials celebrated the opening of new exhibits and the completion of improvements to Ferry Hill. Grants from Jim Norton and the Carlson Family Foundation, along with efforts from the Canal Trust and Pebble Project Volunteers, made this possible. Cross the river to Ferry Hill. Look for the neck of that whiskey bottle. View the exhibits, walk through the house, follow the trail to the C&O Canal towpath. Close your eyes. Hear the ferryman trying to figure out how to get a circus across the river in the 1830s. Listen to the Irish immigrant laborers digging the canal. Hear the cries and shouts and curses as troops try to clamber across the bridge to Shepherdstown from the Antietam battlefield. Smell the fried chicken and pole beans coming from the Beckenbaugh’s restaurant. Mary Bell is a Shepherdstown resident who loves fried chicken and pole beans. Ferry Hill is open Memorial Day through Labor Day, Wednesday through Sunday, 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. www.nps.gov/choh/planyourvisit/ ferry-hill-place.htm Colonel John Blackford’s diary from 1838 is available at http://docsouth.unc. edu/fpn/blackford/blackford.html. 11 ARTWORKS Susan Carney Translating Color PHOTO SUBMITTED BY SUSAN CARNEY Hannah Cohen Susan Carney L ife does not harbor discovery in calm waters; the true adventures begin when we give ourselves to the unexpected. High tides bring low tides, crests bring troughs, a current eddies, an offshore breeze changes directions, and some days, the wind blows just enough, the current carries us not too fast, and we bob in the waves like a ship at sea, content, peaceful, and mindful of either side of the tidal equilibrium. For a moment, the ship rests; the pendulum balances; we find peace. In her most recent works, Susan Carney curates a similar feeling of peace by balancing light and dark colors to bring stillness to an otherwise swaying pendulum. Raised by a father serving in the military, moving place to place was one reliable constant in Carney’s life. She lived in the faraway places about which other children only read stories. Seeking discovery, Carney wandered the forests and deserts beyond her homes, exploring their inhabitants. To some of us, her childhood and teenage years may seem lonely, but Carney found nature’s beauty in the colors of the landscape and the creatures living in its ecosystem. Capturing natural beauty on a canvas, Carney blends her many discoveries and memories into one place. Evident in her work hanging on the walls of her living room, nature remains the core of her inspiration. Colors of the American deserts and Indian forests showcase birds and butterflies from our immediate backyards. Glancing at her walls, Carney credits the years spent living in India as those that inspire her most today. Much of her work showcases the colors and shapes of both India and Asia. Today, Carney stays closer to her home in Shepherdstown, finding inspiration on the trails of the nearby rolling mountain ranges. “Insects and birds have powerful metaphors for me,” says Carney, “in particular the symbolic cyclical life cycle of butterflies and moths.” From an earthbound caterpillar emerges a work of art that catches our attention and paints the spring and summer skies. Getting there is no small feat and involves periods of evolution and patience: a caterpillar wanders, taking in nourishment, then encases itself in a cocoon for a period of development, from which emerges a creature made anew. It’s a process that Carney admires, particularly as she thinks on her own development as an artist. As a child, Carney drew, copying patterns and making sketches. Years later as an adult, she enrolled in her first drawing class. With the encouragement of her stepmother, she entered a few drawings in a juried exhibition. Creating art was and remains her passion for living, but years ago she had no expectation of winning recognition. Yet, she was awarded for her work and sold her first piece. It was of her infant son. Not long after, the young single mother of two boys quit waitressing and her part-time jobs painting signs and copying great works of art (from Van Gogh and Matisse, among others) to enroll in an art study program at Shepherd University. There, under the tutelage of Professors John Carr and Rhonda Smith, Carney discovered printmaking. Carney has continued to produce works using a printmaking technique called monotyping, which layers images one on top of the other. Positive responses from professors and a continuous audience bolstered her talent; Shepherdstown would soon lend itself as a place of reflection where her worldly travels would intertwine their meanderings onto canvas. Carney’s sons made the decision to remain in Shepherdstown, having made friends and not wishing to leave their home. She took a position teaching art at Charles Town Middle School and continued to teach for the Jefferson County Public Schools for 13 years. During that time, she received her master’s in fine arts from the University of Arts in Philadelphia. Carney’s recent decision to quit teaching came when she realized that she needed to focus all her energy into creating. Though uncertain, she is determined that her passion as an artist will prevail to provide for her. For many years Carney has continued to show her works, which have been well received by both local and guest communities. During the Contemporary American Theatre festival, she rents the War Memorial Building to showcase her work, finding a consistently interested audience from those attending the festival, in addition to routinely showing at the Shepherdstown Handmade Market. This winter and spring she will display her work at Montgomery College in Rockville, Md.; Gallery B in Bethesda, Md.; Artfields in Lake City, S.C., and at the Bridge Gallery in Shepherdstown. In addition to shows, Carney creates commissioned works for businesses and individuals. Her work can be found in Shepherdstown at The Press Room, Domestic, and Grapes and Grains, and German Street Coffee and Candlery carries greeting cards featuring her art. Carney tells a story with a brush rather than a pen. Listening to others speaking translates a world of words into colors brought to life in oil and acrylic that Carney paints onto her canvases. When her sons were young, they often brought their friends over to play. Inevitably, her studio would be filled with the sounds of trucks and trains, adventures, and mischief. Each party honored the solitude of the other, but I sense the magic of voices helped her find her creativity. Today, she listens to books, television shows, and interviews while she works. Though her dyslexia makes meeting great writers on the page difficult, Carney becomes audibly engaged with their exceptional talent, particularly of writers who pen a piece for the stage. In her current works, Carney has attributed paintings to Lena Dunham of Girls and both David Chase and Terence Winter of The Sopranos. A work dedicated to Chase reaffirms her underlying theme of balance. Carney extrapolates light and dark shades of neutral tones, rendering a chandelier of polar opposite tones. Listening to episodes of The Sopranos, Carney recognized Chase brought rays of light to otherwise dark places in his characters’ lives. Our struggles and our elations make life interesting and worthwhile; without one, we cannot appreciate the other. Carney captures the moment the pendulum balances, and we feel in harmony with our world. When I saw her piece dedicated to Chase, it was still in its cocoon stage; Carney affixed it to her wall to reflect, as the piece developed a new layer in her mind. Carney hopes those viewing her works feel something, not necessarily something tangible or explainable. (If not, just the rich hues make one want to reach out for their brilliancy.) Each day Carney turns over a new page, writing her own chapters as she paints another layer, another print, another person, place, or creature. Many unexpected, marvelous seas await sail, but Carney knows the best are to be found just beyond her property line. Hannah Cohen is looking forward to green grass and spring flowers. For more information on Carney’s current work, showcases, and commissions, go to www.susancarney.com or email carneys@frontiernet.net. Artwork GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 12 susan carney Blue Moon Light Shadow Milkweed Rooster on Wood GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 13 ARTWORKS Updated Cranes Magnolia Warbler Chandelier I PHOTOS SUBMITTED BY SUSAN CARNEY See artworks in color at shepherdstowngoodnewspaper.org GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 14 Sarah Kezman: “dear sister . . .” dear sister, i wish we could be young again, whole, before we gave ourselves away heart breath soul to be young and do it all over and to be kind and be there and listen everything would be different and we’d both be whole and joyous Are you happy, Callum asks me Mommy, I want you be happy The sweetest boy in the world implores me But life has been so unkind I resolve not to let this dear boy See how I am broken I paint my clown face And let my hair be It’s Natural Afro come back and be a child again running in the yard Before there was no one there And now there is my child Asking me “Mommy, why are you crying?” I want to tell him that everything is ok That the world is happy and safe playing teenage mutant ninja turtles again He is smiling and spitting grapes i will make you marshmallow sandwiches i promise He is cries for a moment and Then he is happy again He asks me to play with him “Mommy, are you done crying?” I tell him he was mistaken — It was just a laugh he heard singing dreaming * * * Block it is extremely difficult to convert Thought’s tangled knots into linear comprehensible print on a flapping light-as-air page this is Absolute — not Excuse pale fingers — Heart beat brain waves all too jumpy for the patient stepping of line by line erratic breath of the thief Stealing time for poetry but too Anxious to write. I tell him I love him More than anything Around the moon Infinite times He calls me Captain Mommy And I hope he never learns why I hold him tight, shielding his eyes I pray that he never feels pain like this like being ripped open by sharks And eaten alive Or hit by a bus a thousand times I hope I have had enough pain For the both of us And that his life will be Long and sweet And that people will be kind * * POETRY Widow 1 The sea that swallowed my heart — I cannot think it was your wish to choke on the depths of blue, green, brown. It was the songs that gave it away — drowning was always part of your act. Since birth, you routinely came so close. Once we were frightened by how close The sea was to our little house. Then, it began — the waves lured you. Usually, you drowned and came back, wanted to be held, sandy and wet, salt sticking to your eye lashes. 2 I tiptoe around the trail of sand left beside our bed, look away as your tears lap at the foundation of our house. A sand castle, the color of your skin, floats away. * * * every day they insist on the truth which I choose to veil in the enchanted how easily my love is a knight shielding me in his kiss sleek white horse leading us to heaven “oh that is so romantic,” they say “it isn’t real” real is cement burnt in the sun real is razor blades and whiskey breath real is hatred — cold stars like a gun when they insist on the truth i rescind my offer of delicious crocheted cupcakes – yarn and cotton as comforting as sugar in your mouth * each morning, she calls me, worrying * * * a girl with the anticipation of grief painted on her face wishes on a smoke-shrouded moon a silver thread tied to her finger about her new baby, exquisite in his folds of skin and milky lipped sweetness into the phone, she cries, telling me, how his nose sounds sniffly or he slept for too long the American soldier speaks to her softly How-in-du-kum-jumilia Everything will be ok i tell her to relax and enjoy the moment, holding her baby feeding him from her breast she is comforted in that moment knowing there is no distance between them my heart aches till my voice trembles if i could just hold my son when he was a newborn for one more hour GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 Sarah Kezman, longtime Shepherdstown resident, joined the Bookend Poets at age 15 and has read widely here. At Shepherd University she graduated in English and women’s studies. Her poems have been in Antietam Review, Pivot, Long Island Quarterly, Sans Merci, Shepherdstown Chronicle, and the anthologies Wild Sweet Notes II and In Good Company. This is her third appearance in the GOOD NEWS PAPER. She lives in Northeast, Pa. 15 EARTHBEAT John Muir Wilderness Warrior All that the sun shines on is beautiful, so long as it is wild. —John Muir, 1898 T his year marks the 50th anniversary of the Wilderness Act, one of the most important pieces of environmental legislation ever passed. John Muir would have been extremely proud of this achievement and, considering the state of the environment at his death, pleasantly surprised at its passage. So, as we celebrate this anniversary, it is an opportune time to revisit the most articulate voice for wilderness that America has ever produced. Ironically, this uniquely American voice was a Scotsman. Born in 1838, Muir immigrated with his family to Wisconsin in 1849, a year after it became a state. (Coincidentally, this was why the middle school in my hometown was called John Muir Middle School—if only all middle schools were named after inspirational conservationists!) Muir’s father, like so many immigrants before him, was a religious dissenter, finding the Presbyterian Church too lenient. He inflicted a joyless religious creed upon his family, forbidding the study of anything but the Bible in his house (all other studies were decried as “frivolous”), and imposed his rigid will with the lash. Not surprisingly, Muir, as a young man, escaped to nature as early as possible. Perhaps less likely, he remained deeply spiritual, although transferring his affections from the Old Testament to nature. A bright but unfocused student at the University of Wisconsin for two years, Muir fled to Canada to avoid the Civil War draft. After the Civil War, he returned to the United States and seemed destined to live a boring life as sawyer in a wagon wheel factory. In 1867, a factory accident left him blind for six weeks, during which time he swore if his sight returned he would use it to help others understand the beauty of the natural world. Upon regaining his sight, Muir, true to his vow, spent the next 47 years observing and preserving as much wilderness as he could fit into one lifetime and several pairs of hiking boots. Muir’s peripatetic wilderness appreciation began with a journey—literally a thousand-mile hike from Indiana to Florida in 1867. He deliberately sought the wildest pathway possible and ended his journey in malarial Florida. Seeking cooler and less buggy environments, Muir spent the next decade of his life in Yosemite—a place that became his Eden. Yosemite was to prove the welcoming home Muir had lacked as a boy. He immediately fell in love with its wild nature. Its mountains, diverse geology, and interesting flora and fauna became his lifelong laboratory. Its preservation became his lifelong crusade. Muir loved the wildness of the place, reveling in earthquakes and climbing high trees in the midst of thunderstorms to better feel the forces of nature. While living in Yosemite, Muir was visited by the great transcendental philosopher, Ralph Waldo Emerson. Muir was in many ways the logical next step in the transcendentalism of Thoreau and Emerson as it evolved into the intellectual wellspring of the American Conservation Movement. If Thoreau’s classroom was the small New England pond outside Boston, Muir’s classroom was the great vistas of the Sierra Mountains. In a sign of the changing times, Muir actually turned down Emerson’s offer to teach at Harvard noting, “I never for a moment thought of giving up God’s big show for a mere profship!” As a former teacher at Harvard, I cannot disagree with Muir’s decision. Muir had been impressed with wildlife ever since his thousand-mile journey to the Gulf, noting at that time, “If a war of races should occur between the wild beasts and Lord Man, I would be tempted to sympathize with the bears.” As alluded to in that quote, Muir was most skeptical of homo sapiens, a skepticism that was soon put to the test in his beloved Yosemite. By the beginning of the 20th century, Muir had become well known through his wilderness writings on California and Alaska. He was one of the best-known figures of the American Conservation Movement, camping with President Theodore Roosevelt in Yosemite in 1903 and lobbying him successfully to make Yosemite a National Park in 1906. Yet no sooner was the conservation movement begun than internecine warfare emerged in the tranquil and beautiful Hetch Hetchy Valley of Yosemite. In 1906, one of those earthquakes that Muir heralded as demonstrating the forces of nature nearly destroyed San Francisco through aftershocks and the resulting fire. In an effort to find a more reliable water source for the city, it was proposed in 1908 that the Hetch Hetchy Valley be dammed and turned into a reservoir for the city. Gifford Pinchot, founder of the U.S. Forest Service in 1905 and popularizer of the new term “conservation,” supported the dam. Now, thanks to Muir, Yosemite was a National Park and only an act of Congress could allow the valley to be destroyed. A vicious battle began between Pinchot and Muir over the future of the valley. Muir laid out his view early on, noting: “These temple-destroyers, devotees of ravaging commercialism, seem to have a perfect contempt for Nature, and instead of lifting their eyes to the God of the mountains, lift them to the Almighty Dollar. Dam Hetch Hetchy! As well dam for water-tanks the people’s cathedrals and churches, for no holier temple has ever been consecrated by the heart of man.” This did not leave a lot of room for compromise. Pinchot attacked Muir for supporting monopolies and thwarting the “wise use” of this water resource. The fight was personal and ugly, and it lasted five years. In 1913 Congress finally approved the dam, and Muir died a year later—supporters said of a broken heart. But Muir’s legacy far outlived his final losing battle. In 1916, the National Park Service was established, whose preservationist mission mirrored Muir’s losing arguments for Hetch Hetchy. In 1892, Muir had formed a small outing club to hike the Sierra Nevada mountains and experience the transformative nature of the wilderness. Over the decades, the mission of this “Sierra Club” grew to include advocacy to protect encroachments on national parks and lobby for new protected wild areas. The club’s evolution from hiking to lobbying ironically mirrored Muir’s own biography. Finally, in 1964, 50 years after Muir’s death, the Wilderness Act was passed, PHOTO COURTESY NCTC/FWS Mark Madison John Muir and Theodore Roosevelt at Yosemite (1903) protecting our nation’s remaining wild places. Although written by Howard Zahniser, the act’s sentiments were Muiresque: “In order to assure that an increasing population, accompanied by expanding settlement and growing mechanization, does not occupy and modify all areas within the United States and its possessions, leaving no lands designated for preservation and protection in their natural condition, it is hereby declared to be the policy of the Congress to secure for the American people of present and future generations the benefits of an enduring resource of wilderness.” There is one other legacy Muir bequeathed all of his heirs, and that is the need to fight for wilderness. Muir’s life and legacy remind us it is not enough to just love wild places; we have to fight to protect them from the ongoing environmental enemies. Like Muir, we may not win every battle, but it is critical we win the war for wilderness. The battle we have fought, and are still fighting, for the forests is a part of the eternal conflict between right and wrong, and we cannot expect to see the end of it.…So we must count on watching and striving for these trees, and should always be glad to find anything so surely good and noble to strive for. —John Muir, speech to the Sierra Club, 1895 Mark Madison teaches environmental history, environmental film, and environmental ethics at Shepherd University. GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 16 The Faeries in Grandma’s Garden Eleanor Hanold Author’s note: This is the first episode in a series intended for parents or other adults to read to children. D o you want to know a secret? Until now only my brother, Frankie, and I have known about my grandma’s friends, the Blossoms, who once lived all of the time in Grandma’s garden in northern Wisconsin and now most of the time in the woods in back of Grandma and Grandpa’s house in Shepherdstown, W. Va. Soon after they met, Grandma and the Blossom children began to visit almost every day. Grandma loves children, so after a couple of summers, Grandma invited the Blossoms to come with her and Grandpa to Shepherdstown, promising them that each summer they would return to Grandma’s garden in Wisconsin. For a very long time Grandma had not known that the Blossoms lived in her garden. The mother and father, Petunia and Foster Blossom, are scientists and work long hours in a research laboratory, which I shall tell you about later. To this day Ms. Petunia and Mr. Foster Blossom do not like their children to speak to anyone outside of their family, other than Grandma of course. Grandma says the three Blossom children, Kylie, Chris, and Amber, speak in quiet voices and know it is important to follow their mom’s and dad’s rules. That is a story for another day though. I hope she does not mind that I tell you this, but Grandma talks out loud to herself and even has conversations with Frankie and me when she and Grandpa are in Wisconsin where, as I told you, they go every summer. One day Grandma was talking to us in her garden (as if we were there) while she was weeding. She looked right at the Blossom children as they were tiptoeing by (they later told Grandma) and said: “I sure wish you would help me with this garden! It is a lot to take care of all by myself. I am not getting any younger, you know.” Amber, the youngest child and a very kind and polite little girl, answered without thinking: “I will help you!” Grandma says she jumped two feet in the air when she heard that sweet little voice. Grandma can hardly see anything without her bifocals, which she never wears when she is gardening. “Who said that?” Grandma exclaimed. Chris, the older brother, who has a bad habit of answering for his little sister, Amber, replied: “We live in your garden! How might we help you?” Grandma was happy about the chance to have someone to visit with, so she answered right away: “I am lonesome for my grandchildren, Nora and Frankie. If you could keep me company and tell me about yourselves and how you came to be in my garden, it would make the time go by faster.” Grandma could not see where the voices came from; still, on that day she began her friendship with the three children, who soon introduced her to their parents, Doctors Petunia and Foster Blossom. GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 Once the Blossom children started talking to Grandma, it seemed like they could not stop. Just like Grandma, they had been lonely too. They could tell that Grandma was a good listener and by now they were quite certain she could not see them, which put them at ease. Did I tell you what the real reason was that Grandma could not see Kylie, Chris, and Amber? They are faeries! Do you have any idea how small faeries are? Here is some of what Grandma learned about the faery children, as she listened with her ears and with her heart. Chris is an ordinary young 12-yearold (in human time) boy faery, or so it would seem on the surface, Grandma says. He tries to seem very brave, he likes to tease his sisters, and he is very friendly. Chris will tell you, Grandma says, that he is the best flyer in the family and that he loves to soar and swoop. He wants to fly with other boy faeries and be a true competitor, but his parents need him at home to help with his sisters, the housework, and the cooking. Chris loves Kylie and Amber, but sometimes he says he gets angry that he 17 ILLUSTRATIONS BY TARA BELL has to take care of them all the time and can never play with other boy faeries. He is not able to attend Faery Academy, where his parents once learned the skills they needed to become scientists. Grandma says that Chris dreams of becoming a doctor who specializes in genetics. When Frankie asked Grandma what specializes and genetics means, she said specializes means to stick with one thing and genetics is stuff we inherit from our ancestors like my green eyes and Frankie’s cute nose. Do you want me to get back to telling you about the faeries? Amber is six years old in human time and the youngest person in the Blossom family, but she tells Grandma she is a big girl and likes to help Kylie and Chris when her mom and dad are at work. She does not talk a lot usually, but Kylie and Chris say she is a good listener. Amber is learning to fly almost as well as Chris can and she loves to read. She hardly ever laughs, even when Chris teases and tickles her. Amber, Chris tells Grandma, still carries a blanket around, wears a diaper at bedtime and cries a lot about anything even a little bit sad. Chris says he worries about Amber sometimes. Grandma says she thinks Amber is very sensitive. Kylie is the oldest of the three child faeries. She is 15 years old in human years. Chris likes teasing Kylie about her glasses that slide down her tiny nose. Then Kylie will tell Chris to stop it with her happy voice and a little shake of her head. Grandma often hears Kylie trying to do pirouettes in what sounds like a satin dress. Grandma says that Kylie is one girl faery who will never give up, seems happy most of the time, and has a laugh that, Chris told Grandma, pierces his heart. Grandma told us that Kylie wears leg braces and has sores on her feet. And Grandma says that Kylie often has to visit faery doctors, do lots of painful exercises, and sometimes even has to have operations. Still, Grandma told us, the only thing Kylie ever complains about is not being able to fly like Chris and Amber can. So while Kylie was at the doctor one day with her parents, Grandma, Chris and Amber had an idea. They wondered if it would help Kylie if she could see that she was not the only one who found it hard to fly. Would you like me to tell you about Grandma’s first flying lesson next time? Eleanor Hanold recently moved to Shepherdstown with her husband, George. She has long been interested in family dynamics, especially those that include children with handicaps or chronic illnesses. Children, faeries, and adventure are among her favorite things. GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 18 Simplicity Finds Its Season at Four Seasons Books John Case PHOTO BY RUTH RAUBERTAS I t’s never easy to profile the Quaker testimony of simplicity. Like its sister virtue modesty, simplicity by nature deflects and diffuses light onto others, as if naturally aware that no labor but death is truly solitary. Simplicity wears a veil of the ordinary—the work shoe, the greatcoat, the book, the eyeglasses—alert to the new, unimpeded by the old. It likes yes and no answers and fewer but better words. Simplicity is not discomfited by the unknown. Of course there is the variant of simplicity known as “modest to a fault.” Not only a veil but a kind of cultural burqa, it can hide unsung heroes who neither were recognized nor sought any recognition. Perhaps this mode of modesty that should be discouraged, but most people will agree that we could generally do with more rather than less modesty in both public and private life. Of course, any virtue may become a fetish. I once knew a man who actually paid associates to publicly remark on his humility. And the unctuous, servile, or sycophantic personas are nearly universally regarded as falsely modest. In what sort of community do the modest lead? Where are acquisitiveness, adornments, spectacle, excessive ambition, and all manner of dishonorable conduct put behind plainness, transparency, and simplicity? Where do handshakes still count? It turns out that Shepherdstown, W.Va., is a candidate town. One need walk no farther up or down German street than number 116 to find the Four Seasons bookstore, with proprietors Mike and Ruth Raubertas. There opens a virtual oracle of knowledge and imagination for any age level. There is a community gateway to a universe in which it’s no longer all about you—where even you are no longer all about you. The first circle of Quaker simplicity is opening the spirit and mind to the wonder of the Other. A bookstore, especially one with the imprint of a locality, of a true spot in space and time, is as good a portal as any to find your true place in the universe. Fiction, history, philosophy, religion, biography, science, politics, art, mystery, sci-fi, poetry, food, new, used, and Mike Raubertas children’s literature—all are invitations to encounter the Other, the most precious moral thread in the acquisition of culture. So it was with Mike and Ruth Raubertas. They moved to Shepherdstown in 1991 to start the bookstore. It opened in the beginning using just the first and middle rooms of the first floor of 116 German St. How did it come to pass? Both Mike and Ruth grew up the Philadelphia area. They married in 1978. After Mike graduated from law school, he was working without much pleasure as an attorney in Washington and eventually found himself spending almost all his lunches in bookstores, reading and browsing, browsing and reading. Part of the intoxication that can overtake one in a bookstore is the sense of sheer awe at the scale of accumulated culture within your grasp, which seems indistinguishable from the liquor of the gods themselves! While Mike was speculating Olympus-like thoughts and draughts at lunchtimes, Ruth’s musical and musical education talents also sought a climate rich in community, cultural and spiritual light. Fate, or the Divine, is known to work even stars and galaxies into favorable alignments, or cross them in transcendent indifference. Mike’s disillusionment with legal work, Ruth’s musical talents, avid reading, a love of books, a college town rich in visitors and history—all recommended Shepherdstown. Suffice it to say, GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 a tree took root, standing near the waters of the Potomac, and has not been moved since. In 1996, Mike and Ruth bought the store they had rented five years before. The survival of their business against both usual and unusual twists of fate owes itself to a unique combination of forces. After purchasing the store, they were able to convert the entire first floor for business use, while renting out the upstairs as apartments. This made it possible to add used books. Used books give the store a strong community flavor, and imprint upon it a unique watermark of Shepherdstown origin. Most of the used books are donated or exchanged locally. Shepherdstown and its character are reflected in multiple dimensions on the bookstore shelves. Local authors and poets, historians and biographers share space with classic collections from the home shelves of professors and soldiers and spies. In 1999, building renovations enabled the store to expand to the second floor, which became the new home of an enlarged children’s section, and over time, a large component of the store business. The used books added depth and dimension, although they required more labor in pricing and evaluation than new books. Making Four Seasons work to support a family required the collaboration of music students and renters. Local banking helped finance the purchase and expansion of the store. Independent bookstores across the nation withered in the storm days of the big box stores: Borders, Barnes and Noble, and Books-A-Million. These companies used economies of scale to undersell smaller stores. Stores in Hagerstown and Frederick and Winchester all drew some customer base away from Shepherdstown. But at the same time, increasing local tourism, the growth of Shepherd University, the rise of the Contemporary American Theater Festival, the National Conservation and Training Center, the Clarion, and the expansion of the Bavarian Inn all provided compensation as the bookstore sought to diversify its offerings. Ruth for a while organized a special section on religious literature. Magazines, cards, and some gifts were added in judicious doses. Live author meet-and-greets, live literature and poetry readings, and custom book displays for local events added more community personality to Four Seasons. For nearly a decade the store served on Sunday mornings as home to Shepherdstown Quaker Meeting for worship and First Day school. After weathering the assault of the big box stores, Four Seasons had to take on new challenges of online competitors like Amazon. But the peculiar features and advantages of Shepherdstown, including the absence of chain stores in the attractive, walkable downtown, have enabled the store to survive, even in the wake of the recent Great Recession. Mike was attracted to Quakers from a ’70s-era Catholic upbringing that was followed by a youthful rebellion and disillusionment and later a renewed understanding and conviction that there was more to the world than material gain. In the Vietnam War he was strongly impressed by the Quaker peace testimony and by the values of simplicity, community, equality, and stewardship through which the Light of the Divine shines. Stewardship of land, resources, and community is both a lifestyle and common dream to which Mike and Ruth have long aspired. Micro-farming is their latest passion. Homegrown chickens, eggs, nuts, fruit, and vegetables grace their dinner table. In addition to micro-farming and permaculture gardening, they have dramatically reduced the energy footprint of their home through a “green” development that uses geothermal and passive solar technologies to heat and cool the house efficiently. Mike and Ruth Raubertas have sought to live their lives toward shared ideals, raise their family, and manage the Four Seasons bookstore in accordance with values well framed in the Quaker testimonies of simplicity, peace, integrity, community, equality, and stewardship. John Case is a retired union representative and software developer, host of the Winners and Losers Radio Program on WSHC weekday mornings, and clerk of the Peace and Social Justice Committee of Shepherdstown Friends. 19 Mercy Killers Marellen Johnson Aherne T and actor, Michael Milligan, is performing for only a small stipend, so there will be no admission. We hope to raise the stipend through advance donations and passing the hat.” Milligan has been writing and acting for the theater for almost two decades. Based in New York City, Milligan has appeared both on and off Broadway and in regional theaters throughout the country. He is a graduate of The Juilliard School. Mercy Killers has had successful tours in Ohio, Californi, and Minnesota, and is now playing off-Broadway in New York City. “Great theater results when the shared experience of seeing a performance together fosters meaningful discussions and holds the tension creatively,” said Yellott, “and Mercy Killers is great theater.” The one-man play pulls on the heart, not to manipulate it but with the hope of breaking it open rather than breaking it into pieces. Joe’s broken heart takes us on a journey of understanding how the shattered heart can separate us through misunderstanding. FLYER PROVIDED BY MICHAEL MILLIGAN he setting is serene. Birds flock to the feeders hung outside the picture windows. The sun streams in, warming us on a cold winter’s day. This is Lynn Yellott’s environment where she and family physician husband, Chess Yellott, have lived for 14 years. Her calmness and passion live in perfect harmony in this setting. Through a passageway, an office filled with file cabinets, books, and family history speak to the commitment Yellott has to the advocacy work that is central to her life. Trained as a librarian, Yellott specialized in the field of Consumer Health Information. Her early career in Massachusetts and New York found Yellott often at odds with a system that found the distribution of health information to consumers too risky. Defying the common practice of libraries of the time, Yellott established a consortium of librarians who provided medical information to the public so they could learn about their conditions and advocate for themselves and their healthcare. Since the early 1990s, Yellott’s focus has included improving the US healthcare system. In 2008, Lynn and Chess, along with Shepherdstown resident Ann Coulter, established a combined chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP) and Healthcare-Now! PNHP, composed primarily of medical personnel, focused on research and advocacy, reflecting their concern with the changing dynamics of American healthcare. The germ of the idea to bring Mercy Killers to West Virginia began more than a year ago when Yellott was introduced to it on a national healthcare conference call. A one-man play, written by Broadway actor Michael Milligan, who also stars in the show, “Mercy Killers is the story of a young couple faced with a life-threatening illness,” Yellott explained. “It opens just after Joe has been hauled into the police station where he is questioned about the death of his wife. In emotional statements to the officer, he reveals their deep love, the anguish of her illness, and their inability to afford treatment.” “I heard about the play,” said Yellott, “talked to people in other states where the play had toured, and then read the script. Ann Coulter and Carolyn Rodis (also of Shepherdstown) agreed it seemed like a good idea. The three of us, with the help of additional volunteers, began working last May to bring it here. It was after I had a chance to sit in the audience of a performance that I knew we had made the right decision. I was riveted by the acting and by Joe’s story. The play is extremely powerful. I was on the edge of my seat, but there is just enough humor to provide a break from the intensity. And a bonus for audiences here is that Michael Milligan, the actor-playwright, loves West Virginia. The character Joe spent his honeymoon in West Virginia, and he describes with passion his experiences at Blackwater Falls, Canaan Valley, and Dolly Sods.” After participating in a discussion series based on the book, Healing the Heart of Democracy, by Parker Palmer, facilitated at the Presbyterian Church in Shepherdstown, Yellott realized that the post-performance discussions could serve as a vehicle to overcome the animosity often engendered by arguments about healthcare. “Participating in the book discussion helped me realize that the post-play discussions we’ve been planning could have the potential to bridge conflicting views. The play itself does not deal with healthcare policy, but it does provide much food for thought. Mercy Killers offers a vehicle for people to come together and talk constructively about diverse responses to the play. We hope people will gain a helpful perspective through the character Joe’s experiences and be able to ‘hold creatively the tension’ (in the words of Parker Palmer) that might arise as a result of differing opinions.” According to Yellott, “PNHP and Healthcare-Now! are concerned about all people who suffer because they cannot afford healthcare. This includes people who have insurance. People with severe illnesses suffer enough just from their medical condition, and then it is compounded by all the stress due to stacks of incomprehensible bills, hassling with insurance companies, and figuring out how to pay the bills, and how to avoid becoming bankrupt. We have been concerned by the polarized nature of discussions about healthcare in our country. We hope that by bringing the play Mercy Killers here, we will help to move the discussion further along. The playwright Marellen Johnson Aherne is a lifelong lover of the theater and a current board member of Shepherdstown’s Contemporary American Theater Festival. Don’t miss this great night of theatre. The performance schedule includes: March 287 p.m., Ice House 138 Independence St., Berkley Springs 291:30 p.m., Fisherman’s Hall 312 South West St., Charles Town 302 p.m., Opera House 131 W. German St., Shepherdstown 317 p.m., Calvary Church 220 W. Burke Street, Martinsburg April 17 p.m., Baha’i Regional Center 308 S. Buchannan St., Ranson 212:30 p.m., Erma Ora Byrd Nursing Hall Auditorium Shepherd University, Shepherdstown For additional information, contact epspan@gmail.com or go to http://mercykillerswv.wordpress.com/ and http://mercykillerstheplay.com. GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 20 ARCHIVE Reprinted From Spring 1994 GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 21 Religious Worship and Education Schedules Asbury Church Christ Reformed, United Church of Christ Christian Science Society Entler Hotel—German & Princess Streets Sunday Worship & Sunday School: 10 a.m. Thanksgiving Day service: 10:00 a.m. Reading Room is in Entler Rm. 210, open before and after the service and by appointment. Call to confirm Sunday school and child care: (304) 261-9024 All are welcome. Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) 4257 Kearneysville Pike Rev. Rudolph Monsio Bropleh, Pastor Telephone: 876-3112 Sunday Worship: 8 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. Mid-Week Mingle: Wednesday, 6:30–8:00 p.m. Real Recognize Real Teen: Sunday, 2:00–3:30 p.m. E-mail: info@4pillarchurch.org www.4pillarchurch.org 304 East German Street Br. Ronald C. Grubb, OCC, Minister Telephone: (304) 876-3354 Bronson Staley, Minister Emeritus Telephone: (301) 241-3972 Sunday Worship: 11:00 a.m. www.christreformedshepherdstown.org New Street United Methodist St. Agnes Catholic Parish St. John’s Baptist St. Peter’s Lutheran 106 South Duke Street Father Mathew Rowgh Telephone: (304) 876-6436 Sunday Eucharist: 8:00 a.m. & 10:30 a.m. Saturday Eucharist: 5:30 p.m. Sunday School: 9:15 a.m. www.StAgnesShepherdstown.org West German Street Rev. Cornell Herbert, Pastor-Elect Telephone: (304) 876-3856 Sunday Worship: 11:00 a.m. & 7:00 p.m. Sunday School: 9:30 a.m. King & High Streets Bruce W. Barth, Interim Pastor Telephone: (304) 876-6771 Sunday Worship: 11:00 a.m. Children/Adult Sunday School: 9:45 a.m. (located in grey house adjacent church) www.Shepherdstownlutheranparish.org Shepherdstown Presbyterian Trinity Episcopal St. James’ Lutheran Church, Uvilla 100 W. Washington Street Randall W. Tremba, Pastor Telephone: (304) 876-6466 Sunday Worship: 8:15 a.m. & 10:45 a.m. Sunday School: 10:45 a.m. Nursery year-round www.shepherdstownpresbyterian.org Corner of Church & German Streets The Rev. G. T. Schramm, Rector The Rev. Frank Coe, Priest Associate Telephone: (304) 876-6990 Sunday Worship: 8:00 a.m. & 10:00 a.m. Sunday School: 10:00 a.m. www.trinityshepherdstown.org Church & New Streets Dee-Ann Dixon, Pastor Telephone: (304) 876-2362 Sunday Worship: 10:00 a.m. Sunday School: 10:00 a.m. Youth Faith Class: 10:00 a.m. nsumc@frontiernet.net www.newstreetumc.com Rt. 230 Uvilla Bruce W. Barth, Interim Pastor Telephone: (304) 876-6771 Sunday Worship: 9:00 a.m. Children’s Sunday School 1st Sunday of month Shepherdstown Monthly Meeting for Worship and First Day School Sundays at 10:00 a.m. Shepherdstown Railroad Station, Audrey Egle Drive Contact Clerk, Elizabeth Hostler, (304) 582-8090, elizhostler@gmail.com http://shepherdstownfriends.org 2nd Act Church meets at Shepherdstown Middle School Rob Davis, Pastor E-mail: rob@2ndactchurch.org Sunday Services: 10 a.m. www.2ndactchurch.org GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 22 BUILDING COMMUNITY BRIDGES An invitation to interracial conversations Kick-Off Program Jefferson High School Auditorium Sunday • March 30 • 4 p.m. Speakers Peter Dougherty, Sheriff, Jefferson County Susan Wall, Superintendent, Jefferson County Schools James Tolbert, President Emeritus, West Virginia NAACP Randall Tremba, Minister, Shepherdstown Presbyterian Church Music Jefferson and Washington High School Choirs • Jefferson High Jazz Band DONORS Byliners Marellen Aherne John Allen Mary Sue Catlett John Demory Denis & Nancy Doss Dr. Billy Ray & Cindi Dunn Patricia Hunt L. Hardy Mason Jean Neely Brian Palank, DDS Mary Ann Rogers Lisa & Paul Welch Dr. & Mrs. Craig Winkel Patrons Jenny Ewing Allen Martin Baach Phil & Charlotte Baker-Shenk Barbara Spicher & Martin Burke Bill & Patricia Carrigan Erdem Ergin Rosamund & Joel Garner Mr. & Mrs. Conrad Hammann W.E. & Joann Knode Wiloughby & Ellen Lemen Rev. James & Nancy Macdonell Philip Salladay Marie Tyler-McGraw & Howard Wachtel Jo & Bill Wilcox Henry Willard II Susan Brown & Arthur Wineburg Johnna Armstrong & Paul Woods Partners William & Roxanna Andersen Edwinna Bernat & Dan Aravic Tom Banks Pat Barnes Mary Bell Linda & L. Dow Benedict Patricia Donohoe & Dr. David Borchard Karen Ashby & Larry Bowers Sandy Brown Marian Buckner Elizabeth Bufithis Beth Burkhardt Helen & John Burns Linda Carter James & Nellie Castleman R. Dabney Chapman Andrea Collins Philip & Frances Cox Rosemarie Coy Marit & Donald Davis John & Margaret Demer Edward Edelen Jr. James Edwards Jean Elliott Eleanor Finn Susan & Richard Fletcher Rosemary Geist Gillespie Family John Gordon Annette Gottschalk van Hilst William & Jeanaine Hammond Marianne Howard & Rufus Hedrick Barbara Heinz Sharon & Al Henderson Jim & Norleen Hoadley GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 Sara Smith Mary & James Holland Donna Windsor & Alton Smith Beverly & Robert Hughes Mary & Mark Smith Tinu Mathew & Oommen Jacob Betty Snyder Lucetta & Marten Jenkins Fred & Sarah Soltow Stanley & Judith Jones Vergie Spiker Joan Keith James & Mary Staley Cynthia & Robert Keller Janet & Oscar Stine Jack Kendall Clifton Stubblefield Susan Kennedy Susan Swanda Ronald Kepple Gloria & Robert Thatcher Mr. & Mrs. James Leathers Elizabeth Walter John & Judith Lilga James & Sandra Watkins Mary Ellen & Greg Lloyd Carolyn & Joe Weaver Dorthea & Richard Malsbary Judy Weese Chris Mark Mildred & Fred Wells Floyd Miller J.D. & G.M. 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Potomac Integrative Health Potomac Integrative 304-579-4746 Health Potomac Integrative Health 304-579-4746 304-579-4746 david didden, md david didden, md david didden, md 23 Schmitt Construction Company 207 S Princess St, Ste 11 Shepherdstown, 207 S Princess St,WV Ste25443 11 fax 304-579-4673 Shepherdstown, 207 S Princess St,WV Ste25443 11 Shepherdstown, WV 25443 fax 304-579-4673 fax 304-579-4673 James A. Schmitt (304) 876-2462 P.O. Box 428 Shepherdstown, WV 25443 Things have you feeling Boxed In? This Space Available Call 304-876-6466 MINI you-store-it RENTAL SPACE Various size units available from 5’ x 5’ to 10’ x 25’ P.O. Box 3153 • Shepherdstown, WV 25443 • (304) 876-3136 Off Route 45 one mile west of Shepherdstown Blue Ridge Community & Counseling Services couples families gender issues cyber issues depression confidential insurance friendly welcoming atmosphere Michael & Deborah Luksa Proprietors 129 West German Street Shepherdstown, WV 25443 304.876.8777 Licensed Psychologist Board Certified, Clinical Hypnotherapy DAVID A. CAMILLETTI ATTORNEY AT LAW, L.C. David A. Camilletti Attorney P.O. Box 1273 Shepherdstown Sales • Service • Rentals • Skateboard & Accessories (304) 876-3000 (877) 884-BIKE www.thepedalpaddle.com 115 German Street Shepherdstown, WV Debbie Dickinson Meredith Wait 213 N. George Street Charles Town, WV 25414 304-725-0937 Fax: 304-725-1039 P.O. Box 209 Shepherdstown, WV 25443 (304) 876-6729 BLUE MOON CAFE Once In a Blue Moon Isn’t Enough lawyer@camillettilaw.com 121 E. German Street Shepherdstown Pedal & Paddle Mailing Address: Old Town Center Suite 9 Shepherdstown, WV 25443 Top 100 Retailer of American Craft WV 25443 Randolph R. MacDonald, Ed.D. runch Sunday B Open for 304-263-0345 304-876-0657 Holistic Psychology Associates Children • Adolescents • Adults • Couples • Families bluemoonshepherdstown .com Corner of Princess & High Streets Shepherdstown, WV 304.876.1920 Jack Berkley, Psy.D., Pllc CONSULTING & CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY Licensed Psychologist, WV, ICADC Mailing Address: P.O. Box 3225 Shepherdstown, WV 25443 The Entler Hotel 129 East German Street Shepherdstown, WV Phone 304-283-4912 • Fax 304-876-1765 Dr. David V. Miljour Chiropractic Physician MADDEX PROFESSIONAL CENTER Route 45 West Shepherdstown, WV 25443 (304) 876-2230 Thank you for being our guests For future reservations please call 304-876-2551 www.bavarianinnwv.com 304-876-6907 205 E. Washington Street • RFD#2, Box 833 (Rt. 230 E. and Railroad Crossing) Shepherdstown, WV 25443 Jim & Kara Day TREE QUESTIONS? Owners Contact a certied arborist. 101 304-876-3104 www.trees101.net Education | Consulting | Tree Care “We can fix anything but a broken heart!” 527 N. Mildred Street, Ste 1 Ranson, WV 25438 304-725-2656 304-725-1710 Mondays closed | Sundays 11:30am-8pm | Tuesdays, Wednesdays, & Thursdays 11:30am-10pm | Fridays & Saturdays 11:30am-11pm 117 East German Street Shepherdstown, WV 25443 | 304.876.1030 wvdomestic.com GOOD NEWS PAPER • spring 2014 Shepherdstown Ministerial Association P.O. Box 1212 Shepherdstown, WV 25443 Like us on Facebook! e Web! Patron P.O. Boxholder Rural Route Boxholder th er.org Now on ewspap n d towngoo lor! epherds www.sh s in co twork see ar Susan Carney New World Order PAID Non-profit Organization U.S. Postage Shepherdstown, WV 25443 Permit No. 33 FREE but not cheap SPRING 2014
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